DESCRIPTION

Dates are complex enough without times and timezones. This module may be used to create simple date objects. It handles:

Validation.

Reject 1999-02-29 but accept 2000-02-29.

Interval arithmetic.

How many days were between two given dates? What date comes N days after today?

Day-of-week calculation.

What day of the week is a given date?

Transparent date formatting.

How should a date object be formatted.

It does not deal with hours, minutes, seconds, and time zones.

A date is uniquely identified by year, month, and day integers within valid ranges. This module will not allow the creation of objects for invalid dates. Attempting to create an invalid date will return undef. Month numbering starts at 1 for January, unlike in C and Java. Years are 4-digit.

Gregorian dates up to year 9999 are handled correctly, but we rely on Perl's builtin localtime function when the current date is requested. On some platforms, localtime may be vulnerable to rollovers such as the Unix time_t wraparound of 18 January 2038.

Overloading is used so you can compare or subtract two dates using standard numeric operators such as ==, and the sum of a date object and an integer is another date object.

Date::Simple objects are immutable. After assigning $date1 to $date2, no change to $date1 can affect $date2. This means, for example, that there is nothing like a set_year operation, and $date++ assigns a new object to $date.

This module contains various undocumented functions. They may not be available on all platforms and are likely to change or disappear in future releases. Please let the author know if you think any of them should be public.

Controlling output format.

As of version 3.0 new ways of controlling the output formats of Date::Simple objects has been provided. However Date::Simple has traditionally provided few ways of stringification, a primary one via the format() method and another primary one via direct stringification. However the later is currently implemented as an XS routine and the former is implemented through a perl routine. This means that using format() is more expensive than stringification and that the stringification format is class specific.

In order to alleviate some of these problems a new mechanism has been introduced to Date::Simple that allows for a per object level format default. In addition a set of utility classes that have different stringification overloads provided. These classes are simple subclasses of Date::Simple and beside the default format() and the overloaded stringification behaviour are identical to Date::Simple. In fact one is totally identical to Date::Simple and is provided mostly for completeness.

The classes included are:

Date::Simple::ISO

Identical to Date::Simple in every respect but name.

Date::Simple::D8

Uses the D8 format (%Y%m%d) as the default format for printing. Uses XS for the overloaded stringification.

Date::Simple::Fmt

Uses the perl implemented format() as the default stringification mechanism. The first argument to the constructor is expected to be the format to use for the object.

NOTE its important to remember that the primary difference between the behaviour of objects of the different classes is how they are stringified when quoted, and what date format is used by default when the format() method is called. Nothing else differs.

CONSTRUCTORS

Several functions take a string or numeric representation and generate a corresponding date object. The most general is new, whose argument list may be empty (returning the current date), a string in format YYYY-MM-DD or YYYYMMDD, a list or arrayref of year, month, and day number, or an existing date object.

Date::Simple->new ([ARG, ...])

date ([ARG, ...])

my $date = Date::Simple->new('1972-01-17');

The new method will return a date object if the values passed in specify a valid date. (See above.) If an invalid date is passed, the method returns undef. If the argument is invalid in form as opposed to numeric range, new dies.

The date function provides the same functionality but must be imported or qualified as Date::Simple::date. (To import all public functions, do use Date::Simple (':all');.) This function returns undef on all invalid input, rather than dying in some cases like new.

date_fmt (FMT,[ARG, ...])

Equivelent to date but creates a Date::Simple::Fmt object instead. The format is expected to be a valid POSIX::strftime format string.

date_iso ([ARG, ...])

Identical to date but creates a Date::Simple::ISO object instead.

date_d8 ([ARG, ...])

Equivelent to date but creates a Date::Simple::D8 object instead.

today()

Returns the current date according to localtime.

Caution: To get tomorrow's date (or any fixed offset from today), do not use today + 1. Perl parses this as today(+1). You need to put empty parentheses after the function: today() + 1.

ymd (YEAR, MONTH, DAY)

Returns a date object with the given year, month, and day numbers. If the arguments do not specify a valid date, undef is returned.

Example:

use Date::Simple ('ymd');
$pbd = ymd(1987, 12, 18);

d8 (STRING)

Parses STRING as "YYYYMMDD" and returns the corresponding date object, or undef if STRING has the wrong format or specifies an invalid date.

Returns the ISO 8601 representation of the date (eg '2004-01-01'), like $date->format("%Y-%m-%d"). This is in fact the default overloaded stringification mechanism and is provided mostly so other subclasses with different overloading can still do fast ISO style date output.

DATE->as_str ([STRING])

DATE->format ([STRING])

DATE->strftime ([STRING])

These functions are equivalent. Return a string representing the date, in the format specified. If you don't pass a parameter, the default date format for the object is used if one has been specified, otherwise uses the default date format for the class the object is a member of, or as a last fallback uses the $Date::Simple::Standard_Format which is changeable, but probably shouldn't be modified. See default_format for details.

The formatting parameter is similar to one you would pass to strftime(3). This is because we actually do pass it to strftime to format the date. This may result in differing behavior across platforms and locales and may not even work everywhere.

DATE->default_format ([FORMAT])

This method sets or gets the default_format for the DATE object or class that it is called on.

OPERATORS

Some operators can be used with Date::Simple instances. If one side of an expression is a date object, and the operator expects two date objects, the other side is interpreted as date(ARG), so an array reference or ISO 8601 string will work.

DATE + NUMBER

DATE - NUMBER

You can construct a new date offset by a number of days using the + and - operators.

DATE1 - DATE2

You can subtract two dates to find the number of days between them.

DATE1 == DATE2

DATE1 < DATE2

DATE1 <=> DATE2

DATE1 cmp DATE2

etc.

You can compare two dates using the arithmetic or string comparison operators. Equality tests (== and eq) return false when one of the expressions can not be converted to a date. Other comparison tests die in such cases. This is intentional, because in a sense, all non-dates are not "equal" to all dates, but in no sense are they "greater" or "less" than dates.

DATE += NUMBER

DATE -= NUMBER

You can increment or decrement a date by a number of days using the += and -= operators. This actually generates a new date object and is equivalent to $date = $date + $number.

"$date"

You can interpolate a date instance directly into a string, in the format specified by ISO 8601 (eg: 2000-01-17) for Date::Simple and Date::Simple::ISO, for Date::Simple::D8 this is the same as calling as_d8() on the object, and for Date::Simple::Fmt this is the same as calling format() on the object.

UTILITIES

leap_year (YEAR)

Returns true if YEAR is a leap year.

days_in_month (YEAR, MONTH)

Returns the number of days in MONTH, YEAR.

leap_year (YEAR)

Returns true if YEAR is a leap year.

days_in_month (YEAR, MONTH)

Returns the number of days in MONTH, YEAR.

AUTHOR

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2001 Kasei.
Copyright (C) 2001,2002 John Tobey.
Copyright (C) 2004 Yves Orton.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of either:
a) the GNU General Public License;
either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version. You should have received a copy of the GNU General
Public License along with this program; see the file COPYING.
If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
b) the Perl Artistic License.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

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